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- DD MM YY or DD MM YYYY? - User Experience Stack Exchange
There have been discussions about the order of DD, MM, YYYY, but never really any discussion about why designers choose to use YYYY over YY (for instance, 01 01 2017 rather than 01 01 17) Any ide
- Display date suggestions as dd mm yyyy or DD MM YYYY
1 I have found a lot of posts regarding how to display the order of a date (MM DD YYYY vs DD MM YYYY) but I haven't found any regarding how to display a "This is how your date should look" hint to a user Below is an example of how I am currently displaying this hint to a user
- Is there a standard date format that expresses Quarters?
What date format would you use to express a quarter, that is still recognized as a date format? For example I have spreadsheet of rows with a date column with dates in YYYY-MM-DD format I want to
- forms - DD MM YYYY - User Experience Stack Exchange
DD MM YYYY means of course "Dam* You" - perhaps in the user's mind ;-) Serious though, over the years developing applications that will receive dates - if typed manually they always become a problem, no matter what you do
- Date field DD MM YYYY entering only 4 digits - User Experience Stack . . .
We use 1 input field with the format DD MM YYYY, allowing formats such as DDMMYYYY, DD-MM-YYYY, DDMMYY, etc , combined with a date picker The above formats all support cases in which the user enters 6 digits, but my question is on the use case in which a user would enter only 4 digits, for example 0103
- friendly version of date formats - User Experience Stack Exchange
dd mm yyyy mm dd yyyy yyyy-mm-dd The 1st one (which has the Java pattern dd MM yyyy) produces 31 12 2011 I've decided that a more friendly version of this format (specifically for email notifications) is the pattern E dd MMM yyyy which produces Tue 11 Jan 2011 I need help figuring out the "email friendly" version for the other 2 versions (2nd
- Which date format to use? - User Experience Stack Exchange
When asking for a date input always state the format you're using near the field (e g MM-DD-YYYY) To decide which format to actually pick, look at your domain
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